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No
temporary teachers, less schooling
IRIN News
September 15, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?Reportid=90486
A recent government
directive forbidding unqualified teachers - estimated to comprise
as much as 60 percent of the staff complement at rural schools -
is causing severe disruptions to education.
"It is
surprising that the government has chosen to stop temporary teachers
from resuming duty this [third] term, when it is well known that
they form the bulk of teaching staff in rural areas," said
Janet Chikawa, a teacher at a secondary school in Seke district,
about 50 km south of the capital, Harare.
"At my
school 10 untrained teachers did not come back, and as a result,
six subjects are not being taught. Students spend most of their
time doing nothing," she told IRIN.
"Stopping
the temporary teachers also means overstretching the few qualified
teachers, since we are being forced to teach extra subjects, some
of which we did not study in college."
Chikawa and
her colleagues have been demoralized by the extra workload, while
their US$150 monthly salary has remained unchanged. She said some
teachers were asking parents to pay extra in the form of chickens
and maize, especially for pupils preparing to write final exams
in the next month.
Raymond Majongwe,
secretary general of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), said the government directive
was "a complete disaster". The Zimbabwe Teachers Association
(ZIMTA) estimates a ratio of about 40 pupils to one teacher.
Hard
hit rural areas
"There
is a growing trend whereby the government makes decisions that harm
students, and we wonder who has advised the authorities to bar temporary
teachers. Rural areas are the hardest hit, and the more remote an
area is, the less the number of qualified teachers there are at
schools in that area," Majongwe told IRIN.
"We have
been informed that there are schools where there are no teachers
at all, particularly in such provinces as Mashonaland Central, Matabeleland
North and the Midlands, because all the teachers there were unqualified."
Zimbabwe's education
system - once regarded as one of sub-Saharan Africa's finest - has
been hit by numerous shocks since 2000, brought on by the country's
rapid economic decline, political violence, and the resulting migration
of qualified teachers to neighbouring states, as well as further
afield to countries such as Britain.
"It would
be a miracle to find qualified teachers to fill the gaps left, but
even if that were to happen, it would confuse the students, because
a new teacher will not be able ensure continuity in the learning
process," said Brighton Jaricha, a senior teacher at a rural
school about 90 km northwest of Harare in Mashonaland West Province.
"I also
foresee a situation whereby the government will reverse its decision,
but it will be too late and there will be much confusion,"
he told IRIN.
"Teachers
may decide to go on strike because their salaries are still low,
and there are no indications that they be better any time soon.
If that happens, it will reverse whatever little gains could have
been made in education from last year [2009], when our situation
started to look up," Jaricha said.
Household
chores replace education
The disruption
in schooling is confusing Simpson Machaya, 10, who wants to return
to school for the third term but instead is helping his father,
a fresh produce seller, to tend their vegetable garden and milk
their single cow.
"My son
is pained that he is not attending school with the other children,
and when he is not doing household chores he reads everything that
he can lay his hands on because he loves school so much," said
his father, Simon Machaya.
"It is
unfortunate that Simpson, just like many children from this area,
cannot attend school because the teachers who were teaching them
have been told by the government not to report for duty. There is
no problem with school fees because some NGOs are taking care of
that," Simon said.
Humanitarian
organizations run numerous education support projects, from assisting
parents to pay school fees to providing school uniforms. The United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) recently donated 13 million textbooks
to 5,500 schools throughout the country, and also supplied free
exercise books.
"The numerous
efforts by the humanitarian community to help our education system
are encouraging," Majongwe said. "But for as long as the
government does not put its house in order, they will count for
nothing."
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